(As Paul notes in his comments on the question, this is from "The Yearling," by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, written in 1937 and set in backwoods Florida in the 1870s).
loulou703, this is a very difficult book to be tackling. It's full of period and regional dialect. I would guess that most native English speakers do what I did when I read this book as a kid--just guessed at things from context and skipped over them.
"Bresh" means "brush." It's clear from another passage: "You say another word... and I'll take a bresh to you." In those days, it was customary to discipline children by spanking them (on their bottoms) with the back of a wooden hairbrush.
As for "frammed," like everyone else in the comments, I've never seen the word before, but it seems obvious from the context that it means "hit."